tv [untitled] November 13, 2021 3:30pm-4:01pm AST
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i won indonesia firms for me. we move full to grow and fraud with balance for green economy, blue economy, and the digital economy with the new job creation law, indonesia is progressively ensuring the policy reform to create quality jobs. invest literally pot english, use growth and progress in indonesia. now, lou hello, i'm emily ang window. harvey's the top stories on al jazeera badge groups of protest is and marching through the capital, cut, sim, denouncing last month and military takeover and insisting on a return to civilian room. the army has closed bridges and set up road blocks around the city. hey, morgan has moved from the capital. people have been mobilizing a for this day since the 30th of october. they say they want to voice their anger
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at the military took over, which happened on october 25th and the decision by general abdel for the hug bohannon to great a sovereignty council that included 5 members of the military from the previous a council. and that did not include anybody from the force of freedom in change coalition. the coalition that represents the protest movement, just simply angered the protesters further. now they're all concerned that there will be violence because of the spread of security forces, not just on main bridges around the capital hotel, but also on main street. and because of the setting up of checkpoints, delegates of the you and climate conference in glasgow have reached a new draft agreement. it calls on rich nations to double their financial commitments by 2025. and it keeps goals to phase out insufficient fossil fuel subsidies. protests being held in democratic republic of congo against the appointment of a new electoral commission heads. it's being led by the catholic and protestant churches with concerns about the independence of the decision. about half of the con glaze dfcs population is catholic. last month, thousands turned out
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a protest calling for unusual election body. a young searing man's body has been found in poland, need bellows, the border polish police have not been able to determine the cause of death. it comes as thousands of refugees and migrants a stuck at the border. the daughter of philippine president rodrigo deterred a, has filed her candidacy for vice president sour to today's announcement for the 2022 election was immediately endorsed by the party of the presidential front run. i'm sorry to today is currently the mayor of devereaux city and donald trump's former top aid. steve bennett, has been charged with 2 criminal acts for disobeying a congressional order. bannon was summoned to appear at a congressional hearing, investigating the general's 6 attack on capitol hill. the committee is trying to determine the causes of the attack that attempted to stop the certification of president biden's election. when those at the headline states you now,
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for the big picture, ah, think i had the tipping point when we had the 1st death current iris in this country. we do not have enough p p. we were reusing mosques. our ministers had no idea what's happening on the shop for them, but i could see the body bags ethnic minority groups were disproportionately affected, white and pregnant doctor and health care workers. why when they've been protected,
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you can understand the story of modern britain without understanding the story of immigration from the commonwealth. right? so caribbean south asians, all the people that were invited to help rebuild the post war economy and the u. k . they then arrived here and suffered racism, not just, not just from the state but on the streets as well through the 60 seventy's eighty's all the way up until today. basically. that's the thing with rice and immigration in britain, the tube and so closely entwined. and it's when thought you were speaking about, there's a fear in this country, the country is going to be swamped by people of a different culture swamp. you know, we, we know what that to a different color. that's exactly what it was. and off the back of that and those appeals to nativism to nationalism. she wins this 17 general election. it gets into
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power. but then she brings in the near liberal revenue in the, in the eighty's which completely transforms a country. and when we had the near privatization of industry, we had deregulation of, of the economy. we changed from a welfare state to this market lead, stay. it wasn't just politics and economics. it was, you know, society and culture is what, right. and then you have her successor ger manger who comes in after her and just continues and builds on everything that she's done before is that he brings him all privatization, many more quangos, less government agencies. and then you get tony black coming in in 1097 and he professes, i'm going to change everything. things can only get better and i feel like those people actually felt it, cuz i knew for me growing up in the early ninety's, it was really hard. it was like quite a hostile place. you're walking to school dogs, ibm, 70 people. i shout and racist remarks are you and then you get through to like the late ninety's and we had our own communities. and so we had
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a refugee day at the school and everyone would come and bring their own dish is after black with the nice that it was, it was these that is funding going to was the just different community initiatives . and you can't, you felt and, but all of that couldn't have happened without the fire. and the anti racism fights from activists throughout the year is good. that the anti racism struggle, that gets us to that point where multiculturalism, it's, it's not so much celebrated, but it's, you know, it's, it's kind of understood as a de facto norm of the country. so that's this moment why kind of black comes in and the question really for him is, what kind of set up is new labor going to look like? is it actually just going to be a continuation of what we've had for 18 years on the conservative? we'll kind of near liberal agenda or is it really going to be something new and a new direction for the country? margaret sasha was once asked, what is your greatest legacy?
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and she said, new labor. oh tony blay was a successor and at to touch it. he reconfigured the labor policy quite fundamentally. so lay policies, traditional commitment to public ownership of democratic control over the economy that is abandoned. and the main role for the state is to correct the market failures and try to include more and more people into market society. it's kind of neoliberalism with a more human face or what we might call progressive neoliberalism. tony blair pulled the labor party away from its socialist mores and anchored it to the free market. what helped paint the new labor government has progressive with social values such as it outward embrace of multiculturalism? no matter what people's background go back. all that problem with
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what is a great life foot by 2001 standing up for the country was also being claimed by a resurgent for right now reorganized around the british national party. the b and p. b and p's writes for white slogan hood over, we struck home, we've got to do something to stand up for ourselves. and they, the only paper telpast ha ha, cutting formed. it's based in the south of england to be in p looked to make gains for the north in the places left behind by the near liberal revolution. the far right started to have demonstrations and places of concentrates at most and residents. i chose some places in these areas which had never recovered from the economic, hence the fact yourself felt bradford badly older than which thus longstanding
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muslim, korean chase, almost all of south asian origin and all. so this ongoing economic uncertainty for the band pay the site asked their tactic to provoke a response from local muslim communities. is to say i'm gonna walk past why your sister, your mother, your am to your granny live and i'm going to shout racist abuse. i kicked off a series of miles across the lawson overseas. much of the blame lies with right wing agitators. we've been sparing up trouble in recent weeks. our youth will not generate any form of racism from these kind of people. we are a mom, gave what was interpreted as a nazi salute was asian news began to very little him. the run what happens is the police come on. what they do is they criminalize the muslim communities 1st huge numbers. the rest of young muslim men,
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david blanket, home secretary under tony blair, have to make a decision about how i was altercations. we're afraid. what kind of lord i come under. that was frame the racial danger, a racial danger that echoed the 1980s. the natives are getting restless again. he said, of course the maniac we're engaging in this and are whining about the sentences they've been given. he chose to put them under the kind of law which allowed people to have very long custodial sentences. and what happened as many, many of the young men who involved from back, but down for 101215 years we can see this incrementally building up, the more crime you commit, the tougher the sentence. that's a game changer and, and blanket says an echo
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a factor. it's about britishness about their failure of petitions. the way that the government responded to this was not to focus on the fact that this was, this was, this was far right, racist causing problems in the stance. the focus very much was on well and know there's something wrong with wasn't communities at the 2 closed off that they're living parallel lives and not like the rest of us. couldn't possibly because of economic marginalization where you see, particularly an external bank. they see children and young people, massive high unemployment issues, huge problems, it tells of racism and open diet. racism couldn't be any of those issues. it must be because there's the elliptic, they lived these parallel lives. they've been taught this terrible religion and they're not integrating. there's one to rise in 2001 is really just like is, is textbook from, there's possibly uprising in a one, it really much is the same playbook. decades of racial discrimination in housing and education had kept south asian muslims,
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segregated from white people. it was a far cry from new labours, wishful celebration of britons multiculturalism. working. we're still dealing with the fallout from the northern ryan when the september 11th attacks in the u. s. shock the world. the black government offered its full support for america, so called war on terror. follow however, in 2005 brittany to came under attack, the london transport system was bombed by 4 british muslim men claiming retaliation against the war on terror. now, all muslims in britain were being asked if that faith was compatible with their being british around the same time, just as one established minority community was being painted as aliens within
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a new group was being welcomed into the country. tony blair opened britain's doors to migrate custom, eastern europe. as a european union grew larger and larger, and the needs of capital grew more and more demanding. in 2007 flag reluctantly stepped aside for golden brown. and a year later, the financial deregulation put in place during the liberal revolution of the 1980s, helped bring about a credit crisis that almost broke the global economy. gordon brown was forced to bail out sailing british banks with british taxpayers, money, crowns climb, as prime minister didn't last long. he was voted out in 2010 and replaced by new conservative prime minister david cameron. cameron sent out to me. the country is still reeling in the wake of a financial disaster and a coalition government that has set its lights on one thing above everything else would use the nation's debt.
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which nearly pre orthodoxy is that you must push your overall levels of data. is past the basic, nearly april policy in response to the global financial crisis. and so this is where we go stereotype from the idea that we must slash public spending in order to pay our debt down. so we'll start at a very disproportionate impacts on the pool on as the minorities, because many people, minorities, are also poor. the government's austerity program had increased insecurity for many people whose lives were already financially insecure. and then in 2016 britain went to the polls to decide if it should stay in or leave the european union. let's make sure the june,
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the 24th is independence day in the franco ha, more than half of those who voted, agreed. and britain left the you. now that insecurity brought about by austerity was given as the reason many white working class communities. those left was off by near liberal reforms, had voted for breakfast. the truth, however, was something else analysis carried out after the referendum revealed that li voters were more likely to be middle class financially stable. and living in the least ethnically diverse parts of the country. breaks it, it seem was driven less by economic insecurity. and more by cultural fear, immigration really was of the hot breaking of course, banking furna of ethnic minorities on his own about race as well. i remember very
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clearly was i can very horsepower time to be blocked for it to be known. why? basically, there are a lot of studies that show that off to the parks, it var in 2060 racist abuse against non white british people. completely shot ha, it's attacking those people. they think of foreign to britishness, a british culture american, the all renewable that is the immigration is a fact of life in britain simply because people invited her from the commonwealth to fill the gap in the labor market. and then everything after the, all the policies were about keeping people out. and immigration was all about making it harder and harder for people, especially those from non white countries, the developing world to come over to brittany. right, right. but then you have this expansion of the you in 2004 and britain realizes it needs a bigger workforce to supply its growing economy. and it's more and happened. happy to open the doors and let people in particular know from eastern europe. business
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is like the idea of a cheaper labor force, right, because it was less money than it cost to pay british workers. and at the same time, people are happy to have cheap labor. no one's going to complain when the house extensions don't cost as much money or their child care or their social care. it's a win win if you've got money in your, in, in that system or but even then resentment against these new immigrants was pastoring. it's not like it just kind of got left. it's always, there is a razor. and especially the fact that they were eastern european. and then at the same time, you'd heard a lot of syrian refugees coming in from their civil war that was happening. they're looking for asylum as well as other people were escaping instability in places like afghanistan. do you remember that poster that nigel garage per out? remember that whole anti immigrant? a breaking point. right. and what he's doing with that whole caravan of actually non european refugees is this idea of you're going to be
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swamped and he's playing in to exactly the same rhetoric that, that you've been playing in to the eighty's. the idea of nobody coming over is ever going to be quite british enough. and you know, we, we're talking about multiculturalism as though it's not an absolute fact of life in certain parts of this country. it was created by the state by inviting everybody here. it's like this is now what britain it ah, the british people have voted to leave and there will must be respected. negotiation with the european union will need to begin under a new prime minister. britton's withdrawal from the e u. so david cameron exit as prime minister in his place came to reason, made from a thing that wrecks, it means breaks it. and we're going to make a success of it. they didn't. how government failed. and she too,
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fell on her sword, making way for the conservatives. she breakfast cheerleader, boris johnson. with his rallying battle cry. let's read. don johnson would get break that done. but within weeks of leaving the european union, britain would be gripped by a far deadly, a challenge. unwelcome, but expected, the grown of r is hid the u. k. the outbreak of corona virus is now officially a pandemic. from this evening i must give the british people be very simple instruction. you must stay at home. in march 2020 as cove at 19 spread across the world, forest johnson placed britain in an emergency locked down. the government's
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overriding aim was to keep the corona virus contained to do that. it would need to rely on the state being fit for purpose. the initial response to the pandemic fundamentally relied on a state structure, an infrastructure that had been already hollowed out. the state becomes increasingly dependent on 2 kinds of private site to companies. one is management consultancies, so they are often brought in to help the state to reorganize services to assist in the, in, basically in the privatization process. and secondly, the state becomes relying on outsourcing companies. so companies that step forward in cycle ok will bit to take on this paul of public services. the state becomes reliant on management consultancies to tell you what to do, to tell it how to govern and also becomes dependent on these private companies to actually run an offer,
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provide basic social services. but essentially ministers were pulling on leavers in white hole that weren't actually connected to anything crucial parts of britain state apparatus had been turned over to private business. and austerity cuts to public health spending meant that in a national emergency, the system failed. when it was most needed, the state was unable to keep track of coven 19 allowing the virus to spread. meaning that more, more sick people were admitted to hospital. and the number of daily deaths began to sole ah, attention now turned to providing personal protective equipment p. p to health workers, trying to keep the sick from dying. it transpired
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that the management consultancy de loyce had overseen the privatization of an a chest supply chain, logistics part the n h s that supplies, things like personal protective equipment. and all of these companies that had paid for these contrasts and one of them all failed to deliver. so there was a massive general shortage of personal protective equipment. this gp group bought their own extra protective equipment weeks ago, including re usable plastic goggles. they know they're luckier than many of the rest of the country. now, the government did maintain a stock pile of pp for panoramic disease. but even though that had been privatized, it been out source to a private company called mo, v, until they stopped pile only covered 2 weeks worth of use. there were sera, shortages of things like vices, masks, gowens, ventilators,
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and almost half of the stock had expired on the shelf. it was past, it's used by date. and this is why we had the terrible situation of health and social care workers having to improvise with that snorkels, or even trash backs, and over a 126 m fatalities. among these workers has been linked to occupational exposure. here are the faces of 10 of those who have lost their lives. the 1st crouch of death of health workers were nearly all black and brown people. and it really hit home the extent to which when it comes to who will care for you when you're at risk or dying. but it still overwhelmingly racialized is always been this idea, but as a particular job you're supposed to do, i would you can track back to the sixties and the, even though, even though i think about fertilizer,
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we think back care work and public transport. the most is on the trains like in the shops, right? he's someone is going to go just as douglas supermarket shows at the minorities all over represented in those very low paid disrespected roles. the rise of the game economy, which forces people to go and work, otherwise they have no sick pay, no holiday pay, no support try. she survive cove at 19 was laying bad. the dysfunction and discrimination coursing through the modern british state at his heart with the 20th century ideology that had stripped the system of its power and its postwar purpose. the roots of the failure of the state during the code 19 pandemic go back decades. and fundamentally,
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it's about the hollowing out of the state, the holling out, the state politically on the hollowing out of the state, institutionally, is the result of a whole program off revolutionizing, ah, state, and society around the market that has left the vast majority of also less secure and more vulnerable, one of the big consequences of neoliberalism has been ramp and inequality levels of inequality not seen since the late 19th century. health is heavily determined by your socio economic status. so societal inequality is manifest themselves in differential rates of disease. if you're poor, you can die up to 10 years earlier than a wealthy person. every else at home is worse for any minorities can pretty much every illness. so all the
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things we've tie into what would make you be more lay to die from coverage? we were already more likely to have those is this kind of perfect storm where there's not really any area of social life from education, from health, from criminal justice. we're not disappointedly impacted. how you are quite as likely to be on free school meals. if you have a black area and you are 5 times the life of let women to die in childbirth, you are more likely to be in our credit. has any feedback, any benedetti? those are the real issues we should be talking about. but as you were not, they were not talking about them. could have been distracted by this culture was an identity. we should not support a demonstration that is in all probability going to end him deliberate and calculated bottom line. the johnson government is really expending
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a lot of political energy trying to concoct to cultural around britishness around whiteness. and it's an echo of the fact, right? concoction the bringing together of racist fears, homophobic phase, mash lift this ah, britishness is defined by who is not. and you can see rightly is not the immigrant is not blood people not to lose the idea of whiteness. why did a tv app to me essential? not just to have you understand a nation, but actually to, to what the nation is, a matter of fact feel fly, come a cost for ice warm writ large through a public health emergency, a phase of it. so i think going forward all gonna have to think about how to we organize some, mobilize ourselves in a way. but when the emergencies come,
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we come for 5. if you look at how many people from ethnic minority and black communities were effected disproportionately by the pandemic, how did that made you feel? i think the, the most concerning port wizard, if the light bulb switch in my brain to say ok ethnic minority groups are more greatly affected, less do risk assessments. let's try and protect them even more. and then we, then we all right now, why did nick with our leaders? we need people to know how to nurse mary, di and why did she die? and why has a family be left to grief? but these families still haven't moved on. i probably never will. these families will never see their normal again.
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aah! and a shawna is pursuing prosperity that influence on the globe and stage one at one aisd investigates what be smooth for one of its closest neighbors. i want. on al jazeera compelling, we keeping our distance because it's actually quite dangerous. ambulances continue to arrive at the scene of the explosion in spite, i still don't feel like i actually know enough about living under fascism was life unequalled broadcasting. south nelson, i have been on august night for
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a happy al jazeera english crowd recipient of the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 5th year running, talked to al jazeera, we ask, how would you describe taliban relationship with the us? we listen copies. one kid is not over covered. 90 nesbitt, terrible demonstration of the failure of human stories that we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on al jazeera. this is al jazeera ah hello, i'm emily anglin. this is a news ally from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes. sudanese security forces 5 t gas to disperse crowns is thousands of people protest against the military
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